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Nature learned long ago how useful proteins are as a diverse set of
building blocks to make materials with very diverse properties.
Spider webs, egg whites, hair follicles, and skeletal muscles are
all largely protein. This book provides a glimpse into both
nature's strategies for the design and produc tion of protein-based
materials, and how scientists have been able to go beyond the
constraints of natural materials to produce synthetic analogs with
potentially wider ranges of properties. The work presented is very
much the beginning of the story. Only recently has there been much
progress in obtaining a molecular understanding of some of nature's
com plex materials, and the mimicry or replacement of these by
synthetic or genetically engineered variants is a field still in
its infancy. Yet this book will serve as a useful introduction for
those wishing to get started in what is sure to be an active and
productive field throughout the 21st century. The authors represent
a wide range of interests and expertise, and the topics chosen are
comprehensive. Charles R. Cantor Center for Advanced Biotechnology
Boston University Series Preface The properties of materials depend
on the nature of the macromolecules, small molecules and inorganic
components and the interfaces and interac tions between them.
Polymer chemistry and physics, and inorganic phase structure and
density are major factors that influence the performance of
materials."
COMEDIA is a book about time, the emotions of time and the
metaphors of time. It describes the cycle of the year in terms of
the human heart: the year being the ideal paradigm or pattern of
all human experience.
This personal narrative about life in a remote desert region of
Western India tells of how love of place and love of person find
their equilibrium in a world far removed from modernity. Yet this
small, distant land of kingship and pastoral life is rapidly being
eroded by the new India of commerce and industrialization. The
author describes in terms how an ancient society is transformed by
the culture of consumption where the lyrical beauty of balance,
exchange and loyalty are translated into a single market economy.
The people and places of post-Partition Kacch, where even the land
and value systems of a lately independent India now appear in a
nostalgic light, are described in detail. This is a record of
private emotion and physical terrain, of traditions and of profound
social practice, and is in a sense one more depiction of what is
rapidly becoming another 'tristes tropiques'.
Nature learned long ago how useful proteins are as a diverse set of
building blocks to make materials with very diverse properties.
Spider webs, egg whites, hair follicles, and skeletal muscles are
all largely protein. This book provides a glimpse into both
nature's strategies for the design and produc tion of protein-based
materials, and how scientists have been able to go beyond the
constraints of natural materials to produce synthetic analogs with
potentially wider ranges of properties. The work presented is very
much the beginning of the story. Only recently has there been much
progress in obtaining a molecular understanding of some of nature's
com plex materials, and the mimicry or replacement of these by
synthetic or genetically engineered variants is a field still in
its infancy. Yet this book will serve as a useful introduction for
those wishing to get started in what is sure to be an active and
productive field throughout the 21st century. The authors represent
a wide range of interests and expertise, and the topics chosen are
comprehensive. Charles R. Cantor Center for Advanced Biotechnology
Boston University Series Preface The properties of materials depend
on the nature of the macromolecules, small molecules and inorganic
components and the interfaces and interac tions between them.
Polymer chemistry and physics, and inorganic phase structure and
density are major factors that influence the performance of
materials."
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Eros (Paperback)
Kevin McGrath
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R468
Discovery Miles 4 680
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Windward (Paperback)
Kevin McGrath
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R422
R359
Discovery Miles 3 590
Save R63 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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COMEDIA is a book about time, the emotions of time and the
metaphors of time. It describes the cycle of the year in terms of
the human heart: the year being the ideal paradigm or pattern of
all human experience.
Heroic Krsna is a portrait of a pre-Hindu and pre-classical figure
of a superhuman hero who in time became the divinity Krsna, an
incarnation of Visnu. This is a picture, drawn from the epic
Mahabharata, of an archaic warrior who excelled as a charioteer; in
fact this is the best depiction that we presently possess in any
epic corpus of a charioteer type. Krsna is also described in his
role of moral instructor, as poet and ambassador, and in the office
of dual kingship with the dharmaraja Yudhisthira. There is no other
representation of a complex friendship in the poem apart from what
exists between Krsna and Arjuna, and this profound amity is
completely founded on the activity of a charioteer and his hero.
Cultural and poetic continuities from the Bronze Age Vedic world
are shown to exist in this model of duality. Krsna is also an adept
of the speech-act, for--apart from his charioteering--he
accomplishes little in the epic except via the causality of speech:
he is a master of doing things with words. This book illustrates a
heroic life which pre-exists the divine status of one of the most
popular Indian deities of today.
This book is a study of heroic femininity as it appears in the
epic "Mahabharata," and focuses particularly on the roles of wife,
daughter-in-law, and mother, on how these women speak and on the
kinship groups and varying marital systems that surround them. It
portrays those qualities that cohere about women in the poem, which
are particular to them and which distinguish them as women, and
describes how women heroes function as crucial speakers in the
generation and maintenance of cultural value and worth. This
includes men who have been transformed into women and women who
have been reincarnated as men. The overall method accomplishes an
ethnography of text, describing a special aspect of the bronze age
preliterate and premonetary world as it is represented by the
actions and metaphors of "Mahabharata." References to contemporary
Indian cinema and popular culture support the narrative of the
book, bringing modern valence to the arguments.
JAYA is a study of how the four poets of the Indian epic
Mahābhārata fuse their separate performances of the poem into a
single and seamless work of art. The book examines in detail the
different mnemonic forms engaged by this verbal activity focusing
primarily on the distinction between what is "seen" and what is
"heard," as the poets stage and dramatize the four dimensions of
their heroic song within one timely occasion. The subtle poetics of
preliteracy and literacy which are compounded in one performance
are demonstrated and made distinct in both a literary and a
conceptual light. JAYA will be of interest to those who work in
Sanskrit and Indian Studies, the Classics, Oral Traditions,
Comparative Literature, and the traditions of archaic poetry.
In Raja Yudhisthira, Kevin McGrath brings his comprehensive
literary, ethnographic, and analytical knowledge of the epic
Mahabharata to bear on the representation of kingship in the poem.
He shows how the preliterate Great Bharata song depicts both
archaic and classical models of kingly and premonetary polity and
how the king becomes a ruler who is viewed as ritually divine.
Based on his precise and empirical close reading of the text,
McGrath then addresses the idea of heroic religion in both
antiquity and today; for bronze-age heroes still receive great
devotional worship in modern India and communities continue to
clash at the sites that have been-for millennia-associated with
these epic figures; in fact, the word hero is in fact more of a
religious than a martial term.One of the most important
contributions of Raja Yudhisthira, and a subtext in McGrath's
analysis of Yudhisthira's kingship, is the revelation that neither
of the contesting moieties of the royal Hastinapura clan triumphs
in the end, for it is the Yadava band of Krsna who achieve real
victory. That is, it is the matriline and not the patriline that
secures ultimate success: it is the kinship group of Krsna-the
heroic figure who was to become the dominant Vaisnava icon of
classical India-who benefits most from the terrible Bharata war.
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